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Air Canada axes 7 N.L. routes, drops service to Labrador West

The airline carrier has dropped 30 routes across the country indefinitely, seven of them in Newfoundland and Labrador. The struggling carrier has also dropped Wabush entirely from its service.

Carrier cuts 30 routes across Canada in bid to save cash

Half of Air Canada's affected routes in Atlantic Canada are in Newfoundland and Labrador. (Eric Foss/CBC)

In an effort to cut costs, Air Canada has suspended seven of its routes in Newfoundland and Labrador indefinitely, and has pulledout of Wabush Airport entirely.

In a statement Tuesday, the carrier which has been struggling during the COVID-19 pandemic announced it will no longer fly between St. John's and Gander, St. John's and Happy Valley-Goose Bay, and St. John's and Deer Lake.

Happy Valley-Goose Bay will also no longer have flights to and from Gander or Deer Lake.

Its decision to pull out of Wabush affects routes between that town and Happy Valley-Goose Bay, as well as Sept-Iles, Que.

Wabush Mayor Ron Barron said the move is disappointing, and comes following what he called decades of a tumultous relationship with the airline.

"These guys are burning bridges here and they are burning them again today," Barron said.

Man in dark suit
Wabush Mayor Ron Barron pulled no punches when asked what he thought of Air Canada pulling out of his town's airport. (Jacob Barker/CBC)

The cuts are part of a Canada-wide contraction, with Air Canada dropping seven other routes in Atlantic Canada, as well as 12 in central Canada and four servicing Saskatchewan.

The release said the changes were due to "continuing weak demand for both business and leisure travel," due to a mix of travel restrictions and border closures. The airline stated any industry recovery will take three to four years.

"Other changes to its network and schedule, as well as further service suspensions, will be considered over the coming weeks," said the release.

The Wabush mayor says he hopes it's not part of a bid for a federal bailout.

"I hope this is not a ploy by Air Canada now to get government on side to give them our tax dollars again to bailthem out. I personally am not a fan of Air Canada. Have never been. They offered a second-grade service here," Barron said."These guys, if you're going to offer a service, provide a service. Not this crap they've been providing in the past.

"I'd be against them ever coming back here if that's the case."

Barron said he spoke with PAL Airlines on Tuesday, and said the company told him it would be stepping in to pick up the slack across Atlantic Canada.

"They see this an opportunity for them to make their business better," Barron said.

'A substantial blow'

Airports across Newfoundland and Labrador have detailed their struggles to survive the industry downturn in recent weeks. An expansion project at St. John's International Airport is on hold as it lost 95 per cent of its traffic in April alone, while the CEO of the Gander International Airport AuthorityReg Wright says his airport is losing $14,000 a day.

While Wright hasn't totalled the financial damage of losing the two Air Canada routes, he estimated those flights account for 20 per cent of the airport's revenue.

"It's certainly a substantial blow to us. Iwon't say it's entirely unforeseen, but it certainly is a sign of the times," he told CBC News.

"The aviation travel industry seems to continue to find new bottoms these days."

Wright said the so-called Atlantic bubble, set to come into effect on Friday, offershope to his troubled industry, but it clearly fell short of what Air Canada needed.

"Iwas hoping that was enough for the airlines to make a decision that they'd try to salvage the summer, but it may have been a little late to salvage these routes," he said.

Air Canada reported a net loss of $1.05 billion in the first quarter of 2020 alone, said the release. It has also downsized its staff by about 20,000 and trimmed 79 planes.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

With files from Garrett Barry and Katie Breen

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